Skip to main content

Nefertiti

The Making of a Global Icon

Charts the global resonance of the image of Nefertiti over the past century. 

From the moment that the bust of Nefertiti was uncovered after over 3,000 years and shown at its first exhibition in Berlin in 1924, it rapidly became an iconic image. Today, the silhouette alone of this powerful Ancient Egyptian queen is recognized and admired around the world.

In Nefertiti: The Making of a Global Icon, historian Sebastian Conrad tracks the full story of the world’s embrace and appropriation of this famous visage. Starting with the discovery of the bust and Germany’s claims to its possession, Conrad shows how it became a contested object, tracing Egypt’s efforts to call for its restitution from 1924 to the present. He also canvasses the uses to which Nefertiti’s image has been put and the causes with which it has been associated: for cosmetic ads and beauty clinics; by advocates for European unity; by drag queens and the queer community; by National Socialists; by nationalists in Egypt and Bengal; by Afro-Brazilian communities; and by important Black figures from Elijah Muhammad to Beyoncé. Against a global backdrop, Conrad showcases the stunning object’s fame and the often-controversial issues and debates in which it has been embroiled. He also argues that the story of Nefertiti’s trajectory offers insights into the changing shape of globalization from the era of imperialism to the present.

This accessible, deeply researched book reveals both how much is at stake in the life of objects and how Nefertiti’s arresting likeness continues to challenge us today.


224 pages | 14 color plates, 11 halftones | 6 x 9

The Life of Ideas

History: African History, European History, General History, History of Ideas

Table of Contents

Introduction

I. Discovery
The Find
The Controversial Division of Spoils
Amarna in Berlin, 1913
Who Was Nefertiti?

II. Exhibition
First Exhibition in 1924
Beyond Beauty: Marketing and Sexuality
Fascism and Democracy
Timelessness and Nature
White Egyptians

III. Restitution
Egyptian Claims
Cold War Nefertiti
The Universal Museum
Revolution and Dictatorship in Cairo

IV. The Global Nefertiti
Egypt and the Origins of Modernity
Pyramids in Mexico, Hieroglyphs in China
Nefertiti in Calcutta and Rio de Janeiro

V. The Afro-American Nefertiti
Egypt in Africa and the African Diaspora
An Afro-American Nefertiti
Afrocentrism
Afrocentrism Contested
Between Empowerment and “Blackwashing”

VI. Globalization, Restitution, and Nefertiti’s Future
Politics, Beauty, Sex
From the Imperial to the Global Age
Restitution

Epilogue

Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Be the first to know

Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!

Sign up here for updates about the Press